In an annulment, there are no ongoing legal rights. The marriage is treated as though it never took place and the parties have no legal connection.
Legal separation has been abolished in most jurisdictions because the parties have expressed a desire to live apart permanently and yet they remain legally married. The parties retain the legal rights of marriage.
The post legal rights of a man in a legal separation refers to the things a man is entitled to in a given separation. Annulment marriage refers to the way of ending a marriage like a divorce.
A man and woman have the same legal rights after a legal annulment of marriage. Their marriage is treated as though it had never taken place and the parties are free to marry. A civil annulment is a decree that the marriage is deemed never to have existed (in legal terms, it is null and void). This differs from a divorce, which terminates a valid marriage. There are both religious and civil annulments. In the United States a civil annulment or divorce must be obtained first in order to make an ecclesiastical annulment effective. Civil laws regarding civil annulment vary from state to state. Some states do not allow annulment if there are children born of the marriage. That makes sense because the couple can dissolve the marriage by a divorce proceeding. Every state has statutory reasons why a court can declare a marriage null and void. The court in states that allow civil annulment with children may look more closely at those reasons if there were children born of the marriage since declaring a marriage null and void may have some emotional or social effect on the children. If there are children involved, the annulment does not make them "illegitimate" and the court will issue custody and child support orders.
A man and woman have the same legal rights after a legal annulment of marriage. Their marriage is treated as though it had never taken place and the parties are free to marry. A civil annulment is a decree that the marriage is deemed never to have existed (in legal terms, it is null and void). This differs from a divorce, which terminates a valid marriage. There are both religious and civil annulments. In the United States a civil annulment or divorce must be obtained first in order to make an ecclesiastical annulment effective. Civil laws regarding civil annulment vary from state to state. Some states do not allow annulment if there are children born of the marriage. That makes sense because the couple can dissolve the marriage by a divorce proceeding. Every state has statutory reasons why a court can declare a marriage null and void. The court in states that allow civil annulment with children may look more closely at those reasons if there were children born of the marriage since declaring a marriage null and void may have some emotional or social effect on the children. If there are children involved, the annulment does not make them "illegitimate" and the court will issue custody and child support orders.
In the case of municipally-registered domestic partnerships, none. For state-registered DPs, particularly in California, Nevada, Oregon and Washington state, the rights are the same as for legal marriage.
Yes, inasmuch as it does not violate any of the principles of the Bill of Rights. The only portion of the Bill of Rights that remotely applies to same-sex marriage is the separation of church and state in the 1st Amendment. The legalization of same-sex marriage represents a rejection of the idea that some people's religious beliefs should be codified in civil law. And, therefore, same-sex marriage is in accordance with the principles of the 1st Amendment.
The enactment of same-sex marriage rights teaches children about the development of American law based on fundamental principles of, for example: the separation of church and state; equality under the law; life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness; states' rights; freedom; civil rights; and, the right of people to live free from discrimination.
the rights of government
A legal separation lasts indefinitely until one of the parties seeks to end the marriage permanently by divorce. A legal separation provides that the couple stays legally married. It is not a common method of ending a marriage and is done under a narrow set of circumstances such as when both parties are committed to not remarrying, perhaps for religious reasons, or for some reasons want to continue rights of inheritance. You can read more about it at the related link.
Bill of rights
You don't lose any marriage rights. ----- Well there are some conjugal rights that may not be available to you if one of you is in prison!
in Iran, nothing
No. The subject of marriage is not mentioned in the Bill of Rights, nor in the United States Constitution itself.